Longwood Lyman's undefeated seniors, Chad Dubin and Pat Perkins, are certainly having things their way this wrestling season.Last week at Jacksonville Forrest High School, Dubin captured the 116- pound regional title, and Perkins added the 224-pound title.Dubin and Perkins will be at home for the Class AAAA State Tournament this Friday and Saturday.For their performances in last week's regional tournament, Dubin (22-0-0) and Perkins (27-0-0) share Seminole Sentinel Player of the Week honors.

It takes a while to get the gist of Scott Turow's latest novel, Ordinary Heroes. It's a disorienting book. First, it is not a brooding contemporary legal thriller, however wishfully Turow's readers might expect one. Second, this is a much more searching, heartfelt effort than its stilted and hamstrung manner would suggest. Though it begins with the trappings of one family's mystery tale, Ordinary Heroes winds up pondering the fundamental mysteries of war. It begins in 1944 with a brief, chirpy message from an American soldier to his fiancee.

Friends, patients and associates of Tampa plastic surgeon Dale Dubin know him as a medical and business genius, publisher of an internationally respected cardiology book, collector of exotic gems and an accomplished artist.Federal law enforcement officials know him as a 46-year-old millionaire obsessed with pornography and young girls.They say he has confessed to filming female patients secretly during examinations and as they disrobed in his office, taping himself having sex with drugged teen-age girls, and exchanging drugs and surgery for sex.On Aug. 11 they arrested Dubin on child pornography charges and confiscated 200 sexually explicit videocassette tapes from his home.

When it comes to domestic violence, most people think of elders and women.But a woman with a disability is two to three times more likely to encounter personal violence against her than an able-bodied woman, according to recent statistics.Marc Dubin, an attorney in Washington, wanted to create an Internet site to help promote awareness on the issue of domestic violence against people with disabilities. He set up his own Web page and is in the process of forming a nonprofit corporation, Communities Against Violence Network.

A federal judge sentenced millionaire plastic surgeon Dale B. Dubin to five years in prison for what the judge called an obsession with pornography and cocaine that turned the doctor's life into a tragedy.U.S. District Judge William J. Castagna told Dubin at a sentencing hearing Friday he could not see how a person of his ability and education could have turned his life into a ''tragedy and waste of such a rare and needed talent.''Dubin pleaded guilty to 22 counts of child pornography and cocaine charges.

A federal grand jury investigating accusations of illegal drug activity by plastic surgeon Dr. Dale Dubin returned a sealed indictment Tuesday, expanding the scope of the investigation.U.S. Magistrate Elizabeth Jenkins agreed to keep the indictment sealed until U.S. District Judge William Castagna has a hearing and rules on questions raised by defense attorneys, possibly today.Dubin, 46, was to have gone on trial Monday on five counts of illegal drug activity. The trial was delayed after U.S. Attorney Robert Merkle told Castagna he expected the grand jury to indict Dubin on eight more drug counts.

U.S. Magistrate Paul Game Jr. on Friday approved the transfer of a nationally known plastic surgeon from an undisclosed jail to a psychiatric center.Dr. Dale Dubin, 46, will be taken to the Anclote Psychiatric Center at Tarpon Springs for treatment of depression.Dubin was arrested on a federal complaint Aug. 11 on three counts of receiving and sending pornographic materials in the mail. A federal grand jury Thursday indicted Dubin on three pornography counts and five drug counts, which could bring up to 75 years in prison and fines of $2 million.

A man has been charged with aggravated assault for allegedly having sex with a woman without telling her he had herpes. Prosecutors say Norman Dubin, 54, knowingly did bodily harm to his girlfriend. He faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted. The 32-year-old woman, whose name has not been released, has shown no symptoms of the virus, but herpes can remain dormant for years. She says she and Dubin had a sexual relationship for three years, but he did not tell her he has herpes. ''I live in fear of not only manifesting the disease but the stigma,'' the woman said in a newspaper interview.

THE CANADIAN government's long-awaited report on Ben Johnson's Olympic steroid scandal and drug abuse in sports will likely be made public next month, an official said. The Dubin report, named after its author, Justice Charles Dubin, is based on 91 days of public hearing and testimony from 119 witnesses. It is expected to prompt sweeping changes in Canadian amateur sports. The judicial inquiry was set up shortly after Johnson tested positive for banned anabolic steroids at the 1988 Seoul Olympics and was stripped of his 100-meter gold medal.

A University of Detroit law professor began filming a documentary here Sunday that is aimed at transforming an unsung civil rights leader into a national hero.Lawrence Dubin is creating the hour-long program for a Public Broadcasting Service station in Michigan on the late Virgil Hawkins, a Lake County man who was denied admission to the University of Florida Law School in 1949 because he was black.Hawkins fought a lengthy court battle with the state that resulted in the integration of the university system in 1958, although Hawkins was never allowed to attend.

A man has been charged with aggravated assault for allegedly having sex with a woman without telling her he had herpes. Prosecutors say Norman Dubin, 54, knowingly did bodily harm to his girlfriend. He faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted. The 32-year-old woman, whose name has not been released, has shown no symptoms of the virus, but herpes can remain dormant for years. She says she and Dubin had a sexual relationship for three years, but he did not tell her he has herpes. ''I live in fear of not only manifesting the disease but the stigma,'' the woman said in a newspaper interview.

A public television documentary on Lake County black civil rights activist Virgil Hawkins will be narrated by former Texas Congresswoman Barbara Jordan.It was a court case initiated by Hawkins that led to the integration of the previously all-white University of Florida law school in the 1950s.Larry Dubin, a law ethics professor at the University of Michigan and producerHawkins of the film, is putting the finishing touches to the documentary this week and next.It is scheduled to air May 26 on PBS WFUM-TV in Michigan.

For four days in February the world waited anxiously as rescuers searched for five skiers missing in the Colorado Rockies' back country.When the five finally appeared, shaken but intact, there was rejoicing. But for the skiers, and two companions who earlier made it to safety, their harrowing ordeal was nothing compared with what has befallen them since then.''Being in the mountains was much easier than this has been,'' said Rob Dubin, 39. ''Believe me, there's no comparison.''Riven by resentments over their mishap and the way they were portrayed in the media, the group's members turned on each other in a flurry of recriminations.

On the same day that experts pronounced their chances of survival practically nil, five cross-country skiers missing for four days in a Rocky Mountain region of extreme avalanche danger turned up safe Tuesday.Two of the skiers called authorities from a pay phone at a trading post. Several hours later, a rescue helicopter found the others near a remote mountain cabin. Three of the five suffered frostbite, and two were hospitalized.''We're absolutely elated to be alive,'' said Ken Torp, 50, after being flown to Aspen.

A University of Detroit law professor began filming a documentary here Sunday that is aimed at transforming an unsung civil rights leader into a national hero.Lawrence Dubin is creating the hour-long program for a Public Broadcasting Service station in Michigan on the late Virgil Hawkins, a Lake County man who was denied admission to the University of Florida Law School in 1949 because he was black.Hawkins fought a lengthy court battle with the state that resulted in the integration of the university system in 1958, although Hawkins was never allowed to attend.

A Michigan law professor who writes a column on ethical issues for The National Law Journal is planning to produce a Public Broadcasting Service television documentary on the life and times of late civil rights pioneer Virgil Hawkins.Larry Dubin teaches at the University of Detroit's law school and is an independent television producer who has done a number of PBS documentaries on law issues. He also is former chairman of the Michigan Attorney Grievance Committee.Dubin was in Lake County over the weekend arranging interviews to be filmed in August.

One of Canada's most-respected judges will open a wide-ranging investigation today on the use of banned drugs in Canadian sports, including the doping scandal that resulted in sprinter Ben Johnson being stripped of his gold medal in the Seoul Olympics. Ontario Associate Chief Justice Charles Dubin, who led a two-year federal inquiry into airline safety in the early 1980s, is empowered to take testimony under oath and subpoena witnesses and documents. Toronto lawyer David Scott: ''One thing you can be sure of in this case is that with Associate Chief Justice Dubin sitting, there will be a hell of a thorough investigation.

A public television documentary on Lake County black civil rights activist Virgil Hawkins will be narrated by former Texas Congresswoman Barbara Jordan.It was a court case initiated by Hawkins that led to the integration of the previously all-white University of Florida law school in the 1950s.Larry Dubin, a law ethics professor at the University of Michigan and producerHawkins of the film, is putting the finishing touches to the documentary this week and next.It is scheduled to air May 26 on PBS WFUM-TV in Michigan.

Bishop Moore's baseball team, 8-1 when the week started, is tied with Alachua Santa Fe for ninth in the Class AA poll released by the Florida Sports Writers Association.LAKE BRANTLEY The baseball team has lost two players to injuries, probably for the remainder of the season. Sophomore infielder Jason Jaillet broke his arm playing basketball about three weeks ago, and junior catcher Chad Ebbert broke his wrist the following week, when he was hit by a foul tip.LAKE HOWELL The girls track team scored in all but four events to finish fifth at the Winter Park Relays Friday at Showalter Field.

THE CANADIAN government's long-awaited report on Ben Johnson's Olympic steroid scandal and drug abuse in sports will likely be made public next month, an official said. The Dubin report, named after its author, Justice Charles Dubin, is based on 91 days of public hearing and testimony from 119 witnesses. It is expected to prompt sweeping changes in Canadian amateur sports. The judicial inquiry was set up shortly after Johnson tested positive for banned anabolic steroids at the 1988 Seoul Olympics and was stripped of his 100-meter gold medal.